Current information RSS

"Zmán Matán Toráh" (The time of giving the Torah) It is the biggest and most important event in humanity! For twenty-six generations, since the creation of Adam, Hashem had hoped to transmit to humanity the precious Torah, which had preceded the creation of the Universe.Finally, He found a people willing to accept it, and the grand moment of its revelation was eagerly awaited by the entire universe, since with it the spiritual purpose of creation would be accomplished.It was a Shabbat morning, the 6th of Sivan, 2448. Har Sinai (Mount Sinai) was trembling with excitement at the momentous event about...

Read more

Shavuot is the second of the Three Pilgrimage Festivals (the other two being Pesach and Sukkot) during which, according to the biblical mandate, every Jew must present himself at the Great Temple in Jerusalem.In general, this holiday is known by the following names:1. Zman matan torateinu – Time of the Giving of our TorahOn the sixth day of the month of Sivan (it was a Shabbat day), in the year 2448 after Creation (1312 BCE), God gave us the Torah on Mount Sinai. The Feast of Weeks (Shavuot), on the 6th and 7th of Sivan, commemorates this great event.2. Chag...

Read more

Rabbi Natan wrote about this: before a person can merit receiving any revelation, knowledge, or new understanding about the Torah or about serving HaShem, which is equivalent to receiving the Torah itself, he must first go through what is considered "desert," which is the obstacles, confusion, doubts, overcoming worldly desires; descents, falls, failures, etc. When a person overcomes and overcomes all these difficulties and impediments, he or she will merit new revelations and understandings about the Torah and his or her service to the Creator. When a person is surrounded by so many obstacles from external forces, that is, by...

Read more

"O Hope of Israel, who saves in the time of suffering" (Jeremiah 14:8) The Prophet Jeremiah refers to the Creator as "Mikveh Israel" The Hope of Israel, Their Savior in difficult times..." (In the Hebrew of the Holy Scriptures, the word Mikveh is translated as "hope") The word Mikveh also means "ritual bath" used for spiritual purification. Rabbi Nachman explains: That by immersing oneself in the waters of the Mikveh one receives the residue of the Divine Light that follows the experience of self-nullification. Those are the "waters of salvation" from sufferings and afflictions, which cleanse us from all impurities:...

Read more

A 90-year-old man was discharged from the hospital after recovering from the coronavirus.When he received the news that he could go home, he was very happy, but after a few minutes he was told that before leaving he had to pay a bill of two thousand euros, for having used the ventilator for a few days.The man, upon hearing this, began to cry. The doctor became very worried and asked him: "Why were you crying?" I asked him if he was crying because he didn't have the money to pay that bill, then they could see if there was some way...

Read more